No. 6 Duke beats No. 15 Michigan 82-75 in Maul

Duke guard Seth Curry (30) attempts to drive the baseline while being defended by Michigan guard Trey Burke (3) in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011, in Lahaina, Hawaii.

The Vols are young and inexperienced, but the Wolverines are not.

LAHAINA, Hawaii — Austin Rivers had 20 points, Seth Curry and Ryan Kelly had 17 each, and No. 6 Duke shot its way into another Maui Invitational championship game with an 82-75 win over No. 15 Michigan on Tuesday.

Duke (6-0) put on an offensive show near the shores of the sparkling Pacific Ocean, scoring on an array of 3-pointers and spectacular shots to remain undefeated (14-0) at the Maui Invitational.

Andre Dawkins added 14 points and the Blue Devils hit 11 of 21 3-pointers while shooting 56 percent overall to earn a spot in Wednesday night's title game against the winner between No. 14 Kansas and UCLA.

Michigan (4-1) struggled early, falling behind by 16, and fought its way back by hitting 21 of 34 shots in the second half. The Wolverines never made it all the way back, unable to slow down the sure-shooting Blue Devils to slip into the third-place game.

Duke has been dominant at the Maui Invitational, winning four titles since 1992. The Blue Devils allowed Tennessee to stay close in this year's opener before wearing the Vols down for a 77-67 win.

Rivers led the way, overcoming a few go-nowhere drives early in the game to hit four 3-pointers and score 18 points, showing off some of the dazzle that made him the nation's No. 1 recruit.

The Vols are young and inexperienced, but the Wolverines are not.

Michigan returned nearly everyone except NBA second-round pick Darius Morris from a team that made it back to the NCAA Tournament last season, lifting expectations in Ann Arbor. The Wolverines solidified their reputation in the Maui opener, playing with poise down the stretch to beat No. 8 Memphis 73-61.

That earned Michigan a spot in the semifinals against Duke, which beat the Wolverines in the second round of last year's NCAA Tournament.

This wasn't exactly a rematch, though.

While the Wolverines only had to replace Morris, Duke lost its top three scorers, Nolan Smith, Kyle Singler and Kyrie Irving, the No. 1 overall pick in the NBA draft.

The new version of the Blue Devils are still talented, though, tall, athletic and versatile — which Michigan found out quickly.

The Wolverines struggled against Duke's defensive pressure early, with no points, five turnovers and three missed field goals before Jordan Morgan scored on a two-handed dunk four minutes into the game. Michigan made a short run to get close, then watched the Blue Devils start to pull away again.

Duke followed its opening 9-0 run with one of 17-4 to lead 34-22 at halftime, hitting 13 of 20 shots in the half.

The Wolverines fought back to start the second half, making 11 of their first 12 shots to get within five.

It still wasn't good enough against Duke.

The Blue Devils matched Michigan almost shot for shot, making sure the lead never got under five. Rivers was the catalyst, scoring 10 points that included a hang-in-the-air leaner. He followed with a kickout to Curry, who dropped in a 3-pointer from the wing that put Duke up 63-49 with 8 minutes left.

Michigan had one late run left, but Duke hit its free throws down the stretch, still keeping the lead to at least five for another trip to the Maui title game.